Yushchenko to take power in Ukraine on Sunday

Mr Viktor Yushchenko will be sworn in as the new president of Ukraine on Sunday to end weeks of turmoil and set the stage for…

Mr Viktor Yushchenko will be sworn in as the new president of Ukraine on Sunday to end weeks of turmoil and set the stage for the former-Soviet state to edge closer to Europe politically.

An overwhelming majority in parliament agreed to hold the inauguration in the chamber on Sunday. Mr Yushchenko, a former prime minister and central banker, wants the ceremony to be akin to a national holiday after 14 years of corrupt rule.

Secretary of State Colin Powell will attend the inauguration in a show of US support for the West-leaning leader.

Mr Yushchenko, his poll victory confirmed by the Supreme Court yesterday, is walking a tightrope in determining Kiev's future policy orientation.

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Congratulated finally on his victory by Kremlin leader Mr Vladimir Putin, he fulfilled a longstanding promise to make Moscow his first foreign visit, agreeing to make a working visit to the Russian capital the day after his inauguration.

That gesture was aimed at millions of voters who supported his defeated rival, former prime minister Viktor Yanukovich - backed by Russia in the campaign's early stages.

"The development of good-neighbourly and equal relations with Ukraine is one of Russia's most important national priorities," Mr Putin said in a message on the Kremlin website.

Mr Yushchenko's Moscow talks are to be followed by an address at the Council of Europe, a major rights body in the French city of Strasbourg. He then flies to Poland for the 60th anniversary of the Soviet army's liberation of the Auschwitz death camp.